mme_hardy: White rose (Default)
mme_hardy ([personal profile] mme_hardy) wrote2017-05-20 09:55 am
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An early trigger warning

 In 1772, Charles Willson Peale's daughter Margaret died of smallpox.  He painted a memorial portrait of her corpse lying on a pillow, prepared for burial.   In 1776 Peale expanded the portrait, adding his wife, Rachel, weeping over the baby.   The revised portrait was called "Mrs. Peale lamenting the death of her child", or alternatively "Rachel Weeping", an allusion to Matthew 2:18: "In Rama was there a voice heard, lamentation, and weeping, and great mourning, Rachel weeping for her children, and would not be comforted, because they are not."   

From the Philadelphia Museum of Art, which now owns the work:

 In 1782 Peale advertised Mrs. Peale Lamenting the Death of Her Child as a feature of his new painting room but sequestered it behind a curtain with the warning: "Before you draw this curtain Consider whether you will afflict a Mother or Father who has lost a Child."

 
 
lexin: (Default)

[personal profile] lexin 2017-05-20 05:46 pm (UTC)(link)
That colouring is odd, but I've seen old 'memento mori' photos which show it, too. Never seen a memento mori photo which showed those ties, though I'd imagine they are there to keep the arms in place rather than having them flop down to the sides.